Gram-negative bacterial infections of the urinary tract elicit a mucosal inflammatory response. Interleukin-6 is secreted into the urine, and polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL) are recruited. In the present study we examined the effect of anti-inflammatory agents on these parameters and on bacterial clearance from the kidneys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe binding of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to glycosphingolipids and to buccal and bronchial epithelial cells was analyzed. Three independently expressed specificities were found by bacterial binding to glycosphingolipids separated by thin-layer chromatography. All strains bound gangliotria- and gangliotetrasylceramide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRegulation of the mucosal inflammatory response to Gram-negative bacteria was analysed. The interleukin 6 (IL-6) secretion, influx of polymorphonuclear leucocytes into urine, and bacterial clearance from the kidneys were compared between Balb/c (nu/nu) and nu/+/- mice, with and without ciclosporin (CsA) treatment. There was no significant influence of the nu genotype on any of the host responses measured.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pap operon encodes the gal alpha 1-4gal beta specific adhesins of Escherichia coli. The presence and organization of pap homologous DNA was determined using two probes specific for pap in 217 uropathogenic E. coli samples by dot blot and Southern blot analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNodular changes of the bladder mucosa, that is cystitis follicularis or cystitis cystica, are found in 2 to 9% of all children with urinary tract infections. The nodules are composed of lymphoid aggregates, resembling Peyer's patches in the intestine. Children with this finding are considered to have a poor short-term prognosis with a marked tendency for recurrent infections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhy do parasites kill their hosts? During this past decade, research in three different areas; evolutionary ecology, medical microbiology, and population genetics has provided theory and data that address this and related questions of selection and the evolution and maintenance of parasite virulence. A general theory of parasite-host coevolution and the conditions for selection to favour parasite virulence has been put forth. Considerable advances have been made in elucidating the mechanisms of pathogenicity and inheritance of virulence in bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of renal scarring was analyzed prospectively in 241 boys with their first known episode of symptomatic urinary tract infection (140 acute pyelonephritis, 61 acute cystitis, and 40 nonspecific). Of 197 boys undergoing urography, 22 (11%) had scars; 20 were in the pyelonephritis group. Vesicoureteral reflux occurred in 81% of those with scarring, compared with 20% of those without scarring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfect Immun
November 1989
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) was produced in response to mucosal and systemic infection of mice with gram-negative bacteria. The IL-6 response was controlled by the lipopolysaccharide gene, Lps; in C3H/HeN mice (Lpsn/Lpsn), the urinary IL-6 levels increased within 30 min after challenge with Escherichia coli, but no response occurred in C3H/HeJ mice (Lpsd/Lpsd). In lipopolysaccharide-responder mice, the levels of local and systemic IL-6 were related to the degree of infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study we compared the specificity for the globoseries of glycolipids of Escherichia coli expressing the O-negative, A-positive (ONAP) adhesin and clones transformed with the pap-like (prs or pap-2) gene cluster. Receptor-active glycolipids were identified by the ability of radiolabeled bacteria to bind to the glycolipids on thin-layer chromatogram plates. The ONAP adhesin and pap-like clones bound with high affinity to the globo-A and Forssman glycolipids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Microbiol
October 1989
The nasopharyngeal Haemophilus influenzae flora of healthy children in a day care center was analyzed by repeated sampling during 4 winter months. The average carrier rate was 39%, but 74% of the children became colonized at some time during the study. The H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relationship between acute-phase responses and bacterial properties was studied in a population of 88 children with their first known episode of acute pyelonephritis. One strain from each patient was included in the study. Eighty-four of the patients were infected with Escherichia coli, which was assigned a clonotype according to the O:K:H stereotype; 55 patients carried one of the 12 multiply occurring clones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe outcome of excretory urography was analyzed in 103 nonpregnant women followed prospectively after community acquired acute pyelonephritis. Radiological abnormality was found in 40 per cent of the patients (17 per cent had major abnormalities, including renal scarring, calculi and obstruction). All 5 women with surgically correctable lesions had rapid bacteriological relapse or recurrent acute pyelonephritis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFEMS Microbiol Immunol
June 1989
The non-secretor phenotype was significantly associated with the occurrence of renal scarring among patients with recurrent pyelonephritis. Girls (n = 77) with recurrent pyelonephritis were followed from the first known episode of infection for up to twelve years with repeated radiological investigations. They were divided into two categories: those with renal scars (n = 35) and those who did not develop scars (n = 42).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVariation in chromosomal DNA in Escherichia coli was studied with probes specific for the P-associated-pilus (pap) region. The presence of DNA homologous to pap was determined by dot blots. Variation in the number of copies of pap and in the organization of internal and flanking sequences was determined by Southern blot hybridization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To investigate the effects of phenoxymethylpenicillin and erythromycin on urinary isolates from patients with untreated asymptomatic bacteriuria.
Design: Retrospective study of subgroup of patients from cohort followed up till the end of 1986.
Setting: Outpatient clinic for children with urinary tract infections.
Objective: To assess the frequency of spontaneous changes of bacterial strains in patients with untreated asymptomatic bacteriuria.
Design: Retrospective analysis of samples from all patients with renal scarring and random sample of patients with normal kidneys.
Setting: Outpatient clinic for children with urinary tract infections.
This review summarizes recent work examining the interaction between host and parasite in recurrent urinary tract infection (UTI) and renal scarring. Virulence in uropathogenic E. coli has been defined by the severity of acute disease.
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